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German national of Turkish origin arrested in Tanzania over al-Shabaab links

A combo of undated handout pictures released on June 13, 2012 by the Kenyan police authorities shows Emrah Erdogan, a German national of Turkish origin wanted by Kenya for suspected links to Somalia's Islamist rebel group Shebab. AFP photo

Hurriyet Daily News
Thursday, June 14, 2012
 
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A German national of Turkish origin wanted by Kenya for suspected links to Somalia's Islamist rebel group Shebab has been arrested in Tanzania, police in both countries said Wednesday.
 
"Yes he was arrested on suspicion of being linked to the Shebab," Tanzanian police spokesman Isaya Mngulu told a press conference, adding that Erdogan, 24, is in police custody pending further investigations.
 
"For security reasons we are not going to say where and how he was arrested on Monday in Dar es Salaam," Mngulu said.
 
"We have received information from Tanzanian authorities over the arrest of Emrah Erdogan," Kenya's deputy police spokesman Charles Owino told AFP.
 
The arrested German is thought to have close links with Swiss national Magd Najjar who was earlier in the month charged by a Kenyan court with being a Shebab member, Owino said.
 
"Erdogan is someone we have been looking for and we have sent our officers to Tanzania to be part of the on going investigation," he added.
 
The German embassy in the Tanzanian commercial capital declined to comment.
 
At the end of last month Kenyan police issued a picture of Erdogan, saying he was thought to have entered Kenya from Somalia through the northern town of Garissa on May 3 and that he was believed to still be in the country.
 
"We have every reason to link him to the Shebab," Kenyan police spokesman Eric Kiraithe said at the time.
 
Several foreigners are wanted by Kenyan police on suspicion of planning bomb attacks or ties to the Shebab, including a another German national Andreas Martin Mueller and a British woman Samantha Lewthwaite, the widow of Germaine Lindsay, one of the suicide bombers in the London July 2005 underground attacks.
 
Another Briton Jermaine Grant was arrested in December in Mombasa he was found with various chemicals, batteries and switches which prosecutors say they planned to use to make explosives.
 
Prosecutors say Grant, a 29-year-old Muslim convert, was working with Lewthwaite. Grant's trial resumes August 15.
 
A Belgian national, Hassan Kafi, and a Tunisian, Mohammed Debarli, are also awaiting trial in Mombasa, accused of being Shebab members. The pair are already serving six months in jail for being in Kenya illegally.


 





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